Disclaimer: Iceman, Gambit,
William and Maddy Drake belong to Marvel Comics. I’m merely borrowing them to
torture them for a little while. And, yes, this is slash. I don’t particularly
support Iceman\Gambit - I’m a RoGambit girl all the way - but this story came
into my head and refused to leave until it was written. So, here it is. Any
comments would be gratefully appreciated at brucepat@iafrica.com. It’s the
first slash I’ve done with X-Men, so I’d be interested in knowing what all of
you think.
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HOME TRUTHS
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. . . the viciousness of the
potatoes . . . ~ Sylvia Plath
“Remember
what I said about tonight?” Bobby warned Remy, as he stepped out of his jeep
and slammed its door behind him. He rubbed his arms, shivering slightly. He had
forgotten how cold it could get up at his old hometown by night - the breezes
off the sea always dropped the temperature by a good, few degrees - or else he
would have brought a jacket. He breathed in deeply, tasting salt, and knew he
was home.
Climbing
out of the other side, his boyfriend gave him an amused look, “No mentionin’
politics. No discussin’ of de X-Men. No speakin’ about how de Saints are goin’
t’win de Superbowl. No refusin’ of seconds at de table. An’ no grabbin’ your
ass. I got it.”
“You
got it, but I don’t seem to remember mentioning the last one.”
“So
I can grab ya ass? Ya parents won’t mind?” Remy asked, his face a picture of
innocence.
“Remy!”
Bobby exclaimed just as the house’s porchlight came on. He looked across to see
his mother silhouetted in the doorway, wiping her hands on her apron. She was a
little smaller and a little thinner than she had been the last time he had come
to see her, he noticed with a pang.
“Bobby,
you’re here,” she said warmly when they came up the path to greet her. Closer,
Bobby could see that his parent’s house had acquired the dilapidated look of
all houses built near the shore. Dingy paint flaked off the boards, the gambrel
roof sagged, and the wood of the porch was swollen from the humidity, “And who
is your friend?”
“I’m
Remy LeBeau,” Remy took her work-hardened hand in his own and kissed it,
“Enchante.”
Bobby
was embarrassed to see his mother blush and giggle like a schoolgirl. She
patted her greying curls with a hand, stepping aside and saying, “Come on in,
and say hello to William. Dinner won’t be a minute.”
Bobby
took a deep breath, then entered the house. The thought of meeting his father
had been a cold, hard lump in his chest for weeks. He had barely been able to
sleep at nights for fear of the argument they would have when he introduced
Remy to him. He didn’t know how to begin to explain to him that he was gay,
that the man beside him was his date for this evening and every other. He
didn’t know if he could.
“Well,
this is a new development,” his father said without greeting, staring flatly at
him over the top of his newspaper, “Between the nips and the muties, I thought
I’d gotten used to the sort of folk you brought to dinner, but this . . . Tell
me, Bobby, are you a fag now?”
“William!”
his mother breathed, “Stop it!”
“Don’t
be stupid,” the words seemed to race out of his mouth by themselves, “I’m not
gay. Remy is just my bud. Is there a rule that says I always have to bring my
girlfriends to dinner?”
He
stared at his father, unable to look across at Remy and see his reaction. His
stomach felt hollow within him. He had always said he would never betray him,
but it had happened so quickly and so easily. He wanted to take his words back,
to tell his parents the truth, but he didn’t. He couldn’t. Later, he would try
and make his boyfriend understand just why he had been unable to tell his
father about their relationship. He doubted he would understand, when he barely
understood it himself. He certainly didn’t care about having his parents’
approval anymore, so what did it matter what they thought about him or his
taste in lovers?
As
his father nodded and turned his attention back to the headlines, he heard Remy
clear his throat. For a brief, terrifying moment, he thought his boyfriend was
going to reveal the truth to them, but he simply said: “May I use ya bathroom,
Mrs Drake? I’d like t’wash up before supper.”
“Of
course, dear.”
While
Remy disappeared through the doorway and his mother ducked back into the
kitchen, he moved to sit on the edge of the chair opposite his father. He
raised his thick eyebrows to acknowledge his presence, but said nothing more to
him. Feeling as awkward as always, Bobby drummed his fingers on his thighs and
tried to think of a conversation that wouldn’t lead to a fight. Anything would
be better than sitting in silence and thinking of what had just happened
between him and the man he loved.
“Nice
weather you’ve been having here,” he tried.
“Yep,”
his father replied, eyes not moving from the article he was reading for a
second.
“I
saw Marge McAllister’s painted her house yellow. I could see it all the way
from the highway.”
“Mmm.”
“Did
you catch the baseball game on ESPN last night?”
“Uh
huh.”
“Have
the Averys given up their general store? Mom said they might be selling in her
last letter.”
He
turned the page and smoothed out the paper, “Nope.”
Giving
up on making any polysyllabic conversation with his father, Bobby leaned back into
the sofa and looked around himself. As with the rest of his parent’s home, time
seemed to have passed normally until the Seventies, then had simply stopped.
The lounge suite with its tasteless pattern of orange and brown flowers. The
sentimental prints of praying children and puppies. The hooked rug on the
floor. The heavy, wooden radio on the table. It was almost like entering a time
capsule where a decade had been suspended forever. The only indication that
time still continued was a cheap, white clock dragging out the seconds on the
mantelpiece. He wondered when - if - Remy was going to return. After what he
had said, he wouldn’t blame him for slipping out of the window and
disappearing. Perhaps their conversation about his parents couldn’t wait until
later.
With
a weak laugh, “Well, I’d better check that my friend hasn’t gotten lost.”
“Yup.”
He
found Remy standing in his old room and looking around himself. His feeling of
being out of time was never more pronounced than when he was in his old room.
Here was his childhood, perfectly preserved. The Spitfire jets hanging from
catgut. The collections of MAD comics
and baseball cards in shoeboxes. The entire set of the Hardy Boys on the bookshelf. The bed with the orange-and-brown
spread that had been outdated even in the Seventies. The Star Wars posters tacked to the wall.
“Welcome
to my misspent youth,” he lifted a hand to flick one of the planes. It swayed
slightly on the end of its string. He remembered lying on his bed staring up at
them and wishing he could fly away on one of them. He never knew quite where he
wanted to go - it might be Cairo one day and Beijing the next - but it was
always far away from here.
Remy
gave him a thin smile, bending to inspect the shelf of books and running his
hands delicately along the spines. He pulled out one of the Hardy Boys novels, and flipped it open
at random. He seemed completely absorbed by it, his lips moving slightly as he
read. Bobby watched him nervously, shifting from one leg to the other, as the
silence stretched out into minutes. Part of him was glad that Remy was taking
it so well, that his parents wouldn’t have to witness an ugly scene between
them. The other part wished he would just shout or cry or throw something at
him. There was some horrible about his boyfriend’s calm.
“About what I said to my folks. . . .” he
said, when the quiet grew too much to bear.
“Dis
isn’t de time or place,” Remy snapped the book shut and replaced it neatly on
the shelf, “We’ll talk about it later, but I don’t t’ink dis is goin’ t’work. I
can’t be wit’ someone who is ashamed of me.”
Bobby
stared at him incredulously, his words not penetrating. The whole situation
seemed too surreal for words. His lover was standing calm and beautiful in the
middle of his childhood room, framed by Spitfires and baseball pennants, and
was telling him it was over. Ever since he had started going out with Remy, he
had expected him to tell him that they were finished, but he had never thought
it would be through his own fault. He felt his gut twist within him.
“I’m
not ashamed of you,” he said in a low voice, “My dad just wouldn’t have
understood. His attitudes are as out of date as . . . as the rest of this
place. He hates gays. It’d just have to led to a huge fight, and I’m so tired
of every dinner we have ending with a fight between us. It just wasn’t worth
it.”
The
moment the words came out of his mouth, he knew it had been the wrong thing to
say. If Remy wasn’t worth a fight with his parents, then he wasn’t worth very
much at all. He looked at his boyfriend to try and gauge his reaction, but his
face was expressionless. He could not tell if he was angry or hurt or simply
numb. Bobby tried to stammer out an apology, but he held up a hand to stop him,
“Looks like I was right about dis relationship not workin’. I’m going to call a
cab to take me back to de mansion. I’ll see you in de morning.”
“Please
stay,” he tried to place a hand on his arm, but he shook it off with a grunt.
Desperately, Bobby added, “I love you.”
Remy
stared at him for a long time, a strange expression in his flicker-flame eyes,
then he shook his head, “No, ya don’t. Adieu, cheri.”
He
felt cool lips brush against his own, then his boyfriend pushed past him and
into the hallway. Feeling as if all the air had been forced out of his lungs,
Bobby collapsed onto his bed and stared up at the swaying planes on the
ceiling. He wished he could fly away on one of them right now. Through the
doorway, he heard his mother ask why he wasn’t staying for dinner and Remy
reply that a problem had come up back home. While his mother murmured words of
polite sympathy and his father said a curt farewell, he thought how quick and
simple it would be to walk into the lounge and tell his parents that Remy was
his boyfriend. It would only take four, little words to do and it would prove
beyond a doubt that he loved him.
But
he didn’t move. He lay on the bed, not knowing how to feel, watching the
Spitfires bob and weave above him, until he heard the screen-door click shut
and Remy’s footsteps crunch on the gravel path.
When
he was sure that Remy was gone, he got up from his bed and walked into the
lounge. Nothing had changed - nothing ever changed here. His father was still
sitting in his armchair glaring at the sports’ page; his mother was singing
tunelessly in the kitchen to the rhythm of chopping carrots. The television
flickered bluely in the corner, its volume turned down to nothing. Six, sixteen
or twenty-six, the scene would have been familiar to him.
For
a moment, Bobby paused in front of the screendoor, looking out through the
white mesh at the driveway. Remy was leaning against one of the gateposts, a
tall, slender silhouette in the half-light that spilled from the porch. He was
holding a cigarette in one hand, but not smoking it. Its glowing tip shone
faintly in the darkness like a firefly.
Behind
him, he heard his father’s newspaper rustle and the clatter of pots in the
kitchen where his mother was preparing supper. He could smell meatloaf cooking
- the same meatloaf that she had dished upp every Thursday of his life. And he
knew that his choice to deny their relationship had been made long before he
had ever met Remy LeBeau. He would always be his parent’s son, longing to fly
away on the nearest plane but forever returning home when he finally did.
Turning
away from the screen-door and the shadowed figure beyond it, he walked back
into the living-room and sat at the table: “So, what’s cooking, good-looking?”